School News and Events

Jim White (Marist Class of 2014) presents his talk, "Consider the Risk," at the Marist College Mathematics Seminar on 13 February 2015. Jim is currently a graduate student in the University of Connecticut M.S. degree program in Financial Risk Management (FRM). Jim was joined by Laurissa Berk, UConn FRM Program Manager.

In June, 2015 Computer Science students collaborated with Spanish students in a two week service-learning project led by Dr. Carolyn Matheus and Dr. Kevin Gaugler. The group travelled to Cabarete, Dominican Republic to provide a technology-education summer camp for students at an underprivileged school.

A nationally recognized leader in the use of technology

Marist College's School of Computer Science and Mathematics is housed in the campus' Hancock Center; a 57,000-square-foot facility overlooking the Hudson River. Designed to help fulfill the Marist goal of infusing information technology into all of its academic disciplines, the Hancock Center includes one networking computer lab, two general use computing labs, 30 faculty offices, seven classrooms, six conference/seminar rooms, an executive presentation center, and a National Science Foundation-funded enterprise computing research laboratory. Many of the existing regional and global technology initiatives for which Marist has earned a leadership reputation, including the Center for Collaborative and On-Demand Computing, the Linux Open Source Development Lab, the Institute for Data Center Professionals, and the IBM-Marist Joint Study Project reside within the walls of this innovative state-of-the-art building. Marist College through the School of Computer Science and Mathematics has been recently awarded a $3 million dollar state grant to establish the New York State Cloud Computing and Analytics Center.

Our Mission

The School of Computer Science & Mathematics prepares its students to live and work within a technologically driven, rapidly changing world. The School provides broad-based mathematical and technological education within the context of a solid liberal arts foundation. Students receive in-depth instruction in the theoretical underpinnings of their chosen fields, which they can apply through a wide variety of practical experiences. Study in each of the School's undergraduate majors provides students with professional preparation for entry into fields of work associated with the major. Concurrently, students' learning prepares them for advanced study in career-oriented graduate programs.

Distinctive Features of the School:

State of the art computer laboratories available for the exclusive use of students within the School

Supporting Scholars

Marist has available three distinct scholarship opportunities for interested and qualified undergraduate applicants interested in pursuing computer science and information technology and systems degrees. These scholarships provide funding for 17 individual undergraduate students through the National Science Foundation (NSF), Goldman Sachs Gives, and Marist College. Scholarships include full room and board in addition to tuition, provide an unmatched opportunity for students to gain academic and professional preparation to succeed in a variety of exciting and high-demand technology fields.